谁嫁给了Elemér Lónyay?

  • 比利時的斯蒂芬妮 结婚了 Elemér Lónyay 。 婚礼当天,Elemér Lónyay 36 岁 (36 年 6 个月零 26 天)。 婚礼当天,比利時的斯蒂芬妮 35 岁 (35 年 10 个月零 1 天)。 年龄差距为 0 年 8 个月零 27 天.

Elemér Lónyay: 婚姻状况时间表

Elemér Lónyay

Elemér Lónyay

Elemér Edmund Lónyay, seit 1896 Graf, seit 1917 Fürst Lónyay von Nagy-Lónya und Vasáros-Namény (* 24. August 1863 auf Schloss Bodrogolaszi, Ungarn; † 29. Juli 1946 in Budapest, Ungarn), war ein ungarischer Diplomat aus der Familie Lónyay de Nagy-Lónya et Vasáros-Namény.

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Wedding Rings

比利時的斯蒂芬妮

比利時的斯蒂芬妮

Princess Stéphanie Clotilde Louise Herminie Marie Charlotte of Belgium (21 May 1864 – 23 August 1945) was a Belgian princess who became Crown Princess of Austria through marriage to Crown Prince Rudolf, heir to the throne of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

Princess Stéphanie was the second daughter of King Leopold II of Belgium and Marie Henriette of Austria. She married in Vienna on 10 May 1881 Crown Prince Rudolf, son and heir of Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria. They had one child, Archduchess Elisabeth Marie. Stéphanie's marriage quickly became fragile. Rudolf, depressed and disappointed by politics, had multiple extramarital affairs, and contracted a venereal disease that he transmitted to his wife, rendering her unable to conceive again. In 1889, Rudolf and his mistress Mary Vetsera were found dead in an apparent murder-suicide pact at the imperial hunting lodge at Mayerling in the Vienna Woods.

In 1900, Stéphanie married again, to Count Elemér Lónyay de Nagy-Lónya et Vásáros-Namény, a Hungarian nobleman of lower rank; for this, she was excluded from the House of Habsburg. However, this second union was happy. After the death of her father in 1909, Stéphanie joined her older sister Louise to claim from the Belgian courts the share of the inheritance of which they both felt they had been stripped.

Until World War II, Count and Countess Lónyay (elevated to the princely rank in 1917) peacefully spent their lives at Rusovce Mansion in Slovakia. In 1935, Stéphanie published her memoirs, entitled Je devais être impératrice ("I Had to Be Empress"). In 1944, she disinherited her daughter, who had divorced to live with a socialist deputy and whom she had not seen since 1925. The arrival of the Red Army in April 1945, at the end of the war, forced Stéphanie and her husband to leave their residence and take refuge in the Pannonhalma Archabbey in Hungary. Stéphanie died of a stroke in the abbey later the same year.

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